| | The Weekend Pitch | March 28, 2021 | Presented by Deloitte | | | | | Hello everybody, I'm Andrew Woodman, PitchBook's London Bureau Chief, and I'll be delivering your Weekend Pitch. As you may have noticed last week, we've opened this space to a stable of our writers, and now it's my turn to offer a European slant on the latest developments in the private markets. If you haven't already, you can subscribe to the European newsletter for fresh daily updates on VC, PE, and M&A news from across the region. Any comments, questions or feedback are always welcome at andrew.woodman@pitchbook.com or via my Twitter account @adwoodman. And now, here's my pitch: | | | | | | Former UK Prime Minister and Greensill adviser David Cameron (right) and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson (Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images) | | | In Greensill's fintech debacle, where does the buck stop? Doing a post-mortem of collapsed UK lender Greensill Capital will be a complicated endeavor. While the consequences of its failure are clear—in the fortunes lost and the careers destroyed—it will be harder to say who should be held responsible. Greensill's rise and fall is a reminder of the damage that can be wrought by the disruptor's move-fast-and-break-things mindset—especially in sectors like finance, where regulators can be slow to catch up. The impact is worse when a large influx of venture capital and support from powerful friends encourages risk-taking and obfuscates any shortcomings. It wasn't long ago that people saw Greensill as an exemplar of innovation. Former UK Prime Minister David Cameron once called Greensill "one of Britain's many great fintech success stories." Its founder—Australian farmboy-turned-entrepreneur Lex Greensill—was honored as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his contribution to the economy. Cameron went on to become an adviser to the startup. He wasn't Greensill's only fan. Gabriel Caillaux, head of General Atlantic's operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, once described Greensill as "the best CEO you can imagine working with," according to a Financial Times article. For a time the plaudits seemed well-earned—until earlier this month. That's when Credit Suisse, which had been financing some of Greensill's loans, froze $10 billion in funds. The investment bank said insurance policies covering defaults had lapsed and that it was reportedly worried about Greensill's exposure to metals conglomerate GFG Alliance. Greensill is based in London, registered in Australia, and has a banking business in Germany, so the fallout has been global. It reportedly owes at least A$1.75 billion (around $1.3 billion) to creditors across its various jurisdictions. The largest debt is owed to SoftBank, which Bloomberg reported is seeking $1.15 billion. The Japanese investor could struggle to recoup that money, and some reports suggest its losses may be higher if you factor in the SoftBank-backed startups that used Greensill's services. It's not just creditors that have been hit. GFG's Liberty Steel subsidiary, which relied on Greensill's financing, was left on the brink of shutting down, reportedly putting 5,000 jobs on the line. Bluestone Resources, a US coal miner, is suing Greensill for alleged fraud after being tied to an $850 million loan from the lender. (Representatives for Greensill declined to comment.) To be sure, Greensill itself holds the bulk of the responsibility for its own downfall, but that isn't the whole picture. Mistakes were clearly made elsewhere. The Financial Times reported that Credit Suisse, which could lose as much as $3 billion, is now blaming insurance broker Marsh & McLennan for not providing adequate coverage. Meanwhile, reports have emerged that even Cameron is under investigation as to whether he breached lobbying laws while working for Greensill. And then there are the regulators. The UK's Financial Conduct Authority, Germany's Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority all failed to recognize the risks Greensill was apparently taking. This isn't the only recent upset in fintech. Last year, German payments processor Wirecard (another SoftBank-backed company) also collapsed. To be clear, the two cases are different in some respects. For one, Wirecard was the subject of a full-blown accounting scandal that led to the arrest of CEO Markus Braun. There were also red flags that seemed to appear much earlier than with Greensill. But there were similarities. Wirecard was a disruptive fintech company that, like Greensill, received significant backing, with relatively little scrutiny coming from either its investors or regulators. One would assume—at the very least—that lessons were learned. But it appears that is not the case. Unless we update the rules governing financial innovation and how they are enforced, it's only a matter of time before another "great fintech success story" turns sour. | | | | | | | | | Since yesterday, the PitchBook Platform added: | 18 Deals | 95 People | 30 Companies | | | | | | | The expansion-stage ecosystem is set for change | | As prominent members of the expansion-stage ecosystem in the US, such as Robinhood, continue to plan to go public or get acquired, what is in store for emergent players? How will the 2020s shape this market segment on the whole? In the latest edition of the Road to Next series, Deloitte industry leaders explore PitchBook datasets to analyze key trends affecting this space, such as: - The implications of the SPAC boom
- How elevated dry powder combined with liquidity pressures could produce novel deals
- Whether valuations are entering bubble territory
Read it now | | | | | | | | Quote/Unquote "If the PIPE doesn't come together, it means that not enough investors agreed with the valuation, in which case the valuation needs to be adjusted, and there is even a possibility that the whole transaction falls apart." —Jeff Crowe, a Norwest Venture Partners managing partner, on how companies evaluate bids from SPACs. | | | | | ... That North America's drop in real estate-related fundraising strategies last year exceeded all other global regions? Read more in our inaugural Global Real Estate Report. | | | | | Talk about March Madness. Venture capitalists have conducted 29 funding rounds worth $500 million or more in the first quarter, PitchBook data shows, with many of the biggest deals coming in March. - All told, this group of funding rounds together raised over $28 billion, a remarkable haul in such a short period of time.
- Nine of the rounds raised at least $1 billion, topped by Robinhood's $3.4 billion rescue package led by Ribbit Capital in February.
- The latest such deal came on Friday when ServiceTitan, which provides remote software for tradespeople working in the field, bagged $500 million in fresh capital led by Tiger Global and Sequoia.
| | | | | Medium, Ev Williams' digital publishing platform, built a media business based on big dreams for a new open-platform model. But its revenue growth fell short of expectations. [The Verge] Tony Hsieh bankrolled a group of followers who helped sustain the late Zappos CEO's drug habit, protected him from outsiders and lived off his largess. [The Wall Street Journal] An artist named Sophia has made a splash by auctioning off a digital work for $688,888. The twist? Sophia is a robot. [The New York Times] "Head of remote work" is becoming one of the hottest new jobs in the tech industry. [San Francisco Chronicle] As more women in China flock to professional video gaming, they're being subjected to misogynistic treatment. Now they're fighting back. [Protocol] | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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